This sounds good to meI have no idea if the white makeup is offensive, but I would not use it on a little girl under any circumstances. For a school parade, the costume and a little makeup would be all I would use, and call it day.
Our elementary schools have been doing parades for at least 50 years, but no contests. There are always a couple of kids in each class who have really creative costumes. I'm lazy and usually buy, so my kids would never win anyway.Surprised the school makes such a big deal of Halloween. The parade with a prize for best costume seems over the top imho. I can just see how elaborate some of the costumes will be with parents/kids trying to outdo each other. And then other kids who can't afford even something basic.....
Parties are done here but they are cut down to an hour or so, and costumes haven't been worn for years. Interesting how this varies area to area.
Not insulting to me but I am not of that culture so have no idea whether it is insulting like black face would be.Ok... I don't know why... (maybe because shes a miserable person...), but MIL told me tonight that dressing up my DD6 as Mulan, (costume from Disney Store) for Halloween, with geisha style make up... is insulting to the Chinese community and that I "can't paint her face white" (like a geisha)...
Now I'm kinda freaking out... DD just happens to like Mulan... and there is a parade at school with costume judging so of course we'd add makeup and hair...
Is this insulting? Or is it "just a halloween costume"?
I don't know, I'm not Chinese. But I would encourage my daughter to dress in Mulan's warrior outfit than her "go find a man" outfit. Otherwise, you are missing the point of the story.
Our elementary schools have been doing parades for at least 50 years, but no contests. There are always a couple of kids in each class who have really creative costumes. I'm lazy and usually buy, so my kids would never win anyway.
I can understand why a 6 yo would want to wear the fancy princess style dress over the warrior outfit. However, when we met Mulan at EPCOT, I was surprised she was not in the warrior outfit - you are right, that was the whole point of the story. I loved that movie - such a great role model for girls (powerful, strong, smart, brave).
Anyway OP, I also vote for no face make up!
You better tell the Pa Dutch not to sell Hex signs to tourists then.I hate to sound like a Tumblrina/Social Justice Warrior, but I'll chime in with my 2 cents.
What you're asking about is what's called 'cultural appropriation' these days. In a nut shell, it's when someone from a dominant culture/race takes something from another culture/race and incorporates it into their own use without consideration of the impact or origin.
I'm white (Scottish and German), and even I have felt a little appropriated sometimes. I get a little sad when I see a wedding party that decided to wear full formal kilts because "they look pretty" even though no one is Scottish... or someone who got a PA Dutch hex sign as a tattoo or as home decor because they "just like the pattern". If they had taken time to research and learn about the meaning of those things and chose to do them because of THAT knowledge, it wouldn't bother me. If not, it devalues something important. These are just VERY minor examples, but the only ones I can speak on as experiencing it myself... most cultural appropriation that we talk about is more across racial boundaries and that makes it more noticeable. (For more info, look into the drama over War Bonnets and Day of the Dead makeup).
And unfortunately, there is no right answer. For every person of Chinese descent who says "Yes, that's offensive.", you're going to find one who says "No, I'm not offended, I'm glad that someone wants to dress up as a character that looks like me." And as a white person, I can't speak for people of Chinese descent, I can only try to think critically about my actions/choices and how they may be perceived.
The question for me is: Does your daughter NEED the makeup in order to dress up like the character Mulan? Does she want to be the Mulan because she is beautiful potential-bride looking for a husband during the Han Dynasty? Or does she want to be Mulan, the hero who saved her country? I don't think you need makeup for the second, even if she is choosing to wear a beautiful dress. I'm going to guess that your daughter likes Mulan because of WHO she is (a kick-butt heroine) vs. WHAT she is (a Han Dynasty Chinese woman).